Abstract

The ever-increasing use of plastics, their fossil origin, and especially their persistence in nature have started a wave of new innovations in materials that are renewable, offer the functionalities of plastics, and are biodegradable. One such class of biopolymers, polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs), are biosynthesized by numerous microorganisms through the conversion of carbon-rich renewable resources. PHA homo- and heteropolyesters are intracellular products of secondary microbial metabolism. When isolated from microbial biomass, PHA biopolymers mimic the functionalities of many of the top-selling plastics of petrochemical origin, but biodegrade in soil, freshwater, and marine environments, and are both industrial- and home-compostable. Only a handful of PHA biopolymers have been studied in-depth, and five of these reliably match the desired material properties of established fossil plastics. Realizing the positive attributes of PHA biopolymers, several established chemical companies and numerous start-ups, brand owners, and converters have begun to produce and use PHA in a variety of industrial and consumer applications, in what can be described as the emergence of the “PHA industry”. While this positive industrial and commercial relevance of PHA can hardly be described as the first wave in its commercial development, it is nonetheless a very serious one with over 25 companies and start-ups and 30+ brand owners announcing partnerships in PHA production and use. The combined product portfolio of the producing companies is restricted to five types of PHA, namely poly(3-hydroxybutyrate), poly(4-hydroxybutyrate), poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyvalerate), poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-4-hydroxybutyrate), and poly(3-hydroxybutyrate-co-3-hydroxyhexanoate), even though PHAs as a class of polymers offer the potential to generate almost limitless combinations of polymers beneficial to humankind. To date, by varying the co-monomer type and content in these PHA biopolymers, their properties emulate those of the seven top-selling fossil plastics, representing 230 million t of annual plastics production. Capacity expansions of 1.5 million t over the next 5 years have been announced. Policymakers worldwide have taken notice and are encouraging industry to adopt biodegradable and compostable material solutions. This wave of commercialization of PHAs in single-use and in durable applications holds the potential to make the decisive quantum leap in reducing plastic pollution, the depletion of fossil resources, and the emission of greenhouse gases and thus fighting climate change. This review presents setbacks and success stories of the past 40 years and the current commercialization wave of PHA biopolymers, their properties, and their fields of application.

Highlights

  • It is undisputed that plastics, which ubiquitously accompany us in our daily lives, have made our society more convenient

  • While regulations are being put in place to reduce the use of plastics, not all of these measures are necessarily beneficial to the environment and practical from a convenience standpoint

  • Calculations based on a plethora of life plastics, especially for single-use applications, by biodegradable alternatives based on cycle studies estimate that replacement of 1 kg fossil plastic by PHA could salvage on renewable carbon to drastically reduce plastic pollution and greenhouse gas emissions and average CO2 emissions by 2 kg and around 30 MJ of fossil resources on an energy basis to curb global warming [1]

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Summary

A New Wave of Industrialization of PHA Biopolyesters

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Office of Research Management and Service, c/o Institute of Chemistry, University of Graz, NAWI Graz, Heinrichstrasse 28/IV, 8010 Graz, Austria. ARENA—Association for Resource Efficient and Sustainable Technologies, Inffeldgasse 21b, 8010 Graz, Austria

Introduction
Chemical
Biomer
Nafigate Corporation–Hydal
Newlight Technologies LLC
Mango Materials
Bio-On
PHA Heteropolyesters and Their Advantages in Processing and Commercialization
ICI–Zeneca–Metabolix–Telles
Bioextrax
Metabolix and Cheiljedang Corporation
PhaBuilder and Medpha
Hybrid-Type PHA Copolyesters Consisting of Scl- and Mcl-PHA Building Blocks
Danimer Scientific
Bluepha
Findings
Industrializing Mcl-PHA Copolyesters
Full Text
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